Caroline starts spooning out margarita mixture.
âTurning thirty is like a funeral?'
âThe funeral for your youth. Lots of drink and sympathy and attention and flowers, and you see everyone you know.'
âAnd for a moment there we were worried the comparison was going to be tasteless,' Ivor says, pushing his glasses up the bridge of his nose. He's sitting on the floor, legs outstretched, one arm similarly outstretched, pointing a remote at something lozenge-shaped that's apparently a stereo. âHave you really got The Eagles on here, Caroline, or is it a sick joke?'
âThirty-one is like grieving,' Mindy continues. âBecause getting on with it is much worse, but no one expects you to complain any more.'
âOh, we expect you to complain, Mind,' I say, carefully passing her a shallow glass that looks like a saucer on a stem.
âThe fashion magazines make me feel so old and irrelevant, it's like the only thing I should bother buying is TENA Lady. Can I eat this?' Mindy removes the lime slice from the side of her glass and examines it.
She is, in general, a baffling mixture of extreme aptitude and total daftness. Mindy did a business degree and insisted throughout she was useless at it and definitely wasn't going to take on the family firm, which sold fabrics in Rusholme. Then she got a first and picked the business up for one summer, created mail order and online sales, quadrupled the turnover and grudgingly accepted she might have a knack, and a career. Yet on holiday in California recently, when a tour guide announced, âOn a clear day, with binoculars, you can see whales from here', Mindy said, âOh my God, all the way to Cardigan Bay?'
âLime? Er ⦠not usually,' I say.
âOh. I thought you might've infused it with something.'
I collect another glass and deliver it to Ivor, then Caroline and I carry ours to our seats.
âCheers,' I say. âTo my broken engagement and loveless future.'
âTo your future,' Caroline chides.
We raise glasses, slurp, wince a bit â the tequila is quite loud in the mix. It makes my lips numb and stomach warm.
Single.
It's been so long since the word applied to me and I don't feel it yet. I'm something else, in limbo: tip-toeing round my own house, sleeping in the spare room, avoiding my ex-fiancé and his furious, seething disappointment. He's right: this is what I want, I have less reason than him to be upset.
âHow's it going, you two living together?' Caroline asks, carefully, as if she can hear me think.
âWe're not putting piano wire at neck level across doorways yet. We stay out of each other's way. I need to step up the house hunt. I'm finding excuses to be out every evening as it is.'
âHow did your mum take it?' Mindy bites her lip.
Mindy understands that, as one of the two slated bridesmaids, she was the only other person as excited as my mum.
âNot well,' I say, with my skill for understatement.
It was awful. The phone call went in phases. The âstop playing a practical joke' section. The âyou're having cold feet, it's natural' parry. The âgive it a few weeks, see how you feel' suggestion. Anger, denial, bargaining, and then â I hope â some sort of acceptance. Dad came on and asked me if it was because I was worrying about the cost, as they'd cover it all if need be. It was then that I cried.
âI hope you don't mind me asking, it's just, you never said â¦' Mindy asks. âWhat actually caused the row that made you and Rhys finish?'
âOh â¦' I say. âIt was Macclesfield Elvis.'
There's a pause. Our default setting is pissing about. As the demise of my epically long relationship only happened a week previous, no one knows quite what's appropriate yet. It's like after any major tragedy: when's it OK to start forwarding the email jokes?
âYou shagged Macclesfield Elvis?' Ivor says. âHow did it feel to be nailed by The King?'
âIvor!' Mindy wails.
I laugh.
âOooh!' Caroline suddenly exclaims, in a very un-Caroline-like way.
âHave you sat on something?' Mindy says.
âI forgot to say. Guess who I saw this week?'
I'm trying to think which famous person is meant to be my top spot. Unless it's someone I've done a story on, but I spend all day looking at people who are only ever celebrities for the wrong reasons. I doubt a sex attacker on the lam would provoke this delight.
â
Coronation Street
or Man U?' Mindy asks. These are the two main sources of famous people in the city, it's true.
âNeither,' Caroline says. âAnd this is a quiz for Rachel.'
I shrug, crunching on some ice with my back teeth.
âUh ⦠Darren Day?'
âNo.'
âLembit Opik?'
âNo.'
âMy dad?'
âWhy would I see your dad?'
âHe could be over from Sheffield, having a clandestine affair behind my mum's back.'
âIn which case I'd announce it in the form of a fun quiz?'
âOK, I give up.'
Caroline sits back with a triumphant look on her face.
âEnglish Ben.'
I go hot and cold at the same time, like I've suddenly caught the flu. Slight nausea is right behind the temperature fluctuation. Yep, the analogy holds.
Ivor twists round to look at Caroline.
âEnglish Ben? What kind of nickname is that? As opposed to what?'
âIs he any relation to Big Ben?' Mindy asks.
âEnglish Ben,' Caroline repeats. âRachel knows who I mean.'
I feel like Alec Guinness in
Star Wars
when Luke Skywalker turns up at his cave and starts asking for Obi Wan Kenobi.
Now there's a name I've not heard in a long, long time â¦
âWhere was he?' I say.
âGoing into Central Library.'
âHow about telling old “Two Legs Ivor” who you're on about?' Ivor asks.
âI could be “Hindi Mindy”,' Mindy offers, and Ivor looks like he's going to explain something to her, then changes his mind.
âHe was a friend at uni, remember,' I say, covering my mouth with my glass in case my face is betraying more than I want. âOff my course. Hence, English. Ben.'
âIf he was a friend of yours, why is Caroline all ⦠wriggly?' Mindy asks.
âCaroline always fancied him,' I say, glad this is the truth, if nothing like the whole truth, so help me God.
âAh.' Mindy gives me an appraising look. âYou can't have fancied him then, because you and Caroline and taste in men â never the twain shall meet.'
I could kiss Mindy for this.
âTrue,' I agree, emphatically.
âHe still looks
fine
,' Caroline says, and my stomach starts flopping around like a live crustacean heading for the pot in the Yang Sing kitchen. âHe was in a gorgeous suit and tie.'
âA
suit
, you say? This man is fascinating,' Ivor says. âWhat a character. I'm compelled to know more. Oh. No, hang on â I'm not.'
âDid you and he ever â¦?' Mindy asks Caroline. âI'm trying to place him â¦'
âGod, no, I wasn't glamorous enough for him, I don't think any of us were, were we, Rach? Bit of a womaniser. But somehow nice with it.'
âYep,' I squeak.
âWait! I remember Ben! All like, preppy, smart and confident?' Mindy says. âWe thought he must be rich and then it was like, no, he just ⦠washes.' She looks at Ivor, who takes the bait.
âOh, rings a vague bell. Poser who was â¦' Ivor flips his collar up ââ¦
Is it handsome in here or is it just me
?'
âHe wasn't like that!' I laugh, nervously.
âYou lost touch with Ben completely?' Caroline asks. âNot Facebook friends or anything?'
Severed touch with him
.
Touch was torn in half, like chesting the ribbon at the end of a race.
âNo. I mean, yeah. Not seen Ben since uni.'
And my seven hundred and eighty-one Google searches yielded no results
.
âI've seen him at the library a few times, it's only now it's clicked and I realised why I recognised him. He must be staying in Manchester. Do you want me to say hello if I see him again, pass on your mobile number?'
âNo!' I say, with a note of panic not entirely absent from my voice. I feel I have to explain this, so I add: âIt could sound as if I'm after him.'
âIf you were only friends before, why would he automatically think that?' Caroline asks, not unreasonably.
âI'm single after such a long time. I don't know, it could be misinterpreted. And I'm not looking to ⦠I don't want it to look like, here's my single friend who wants me to auction her phone number to men in the street,' I waffle.
âWell, I wasn't going to put it on a card in a phone box!' Caroline huffs.
âI know, I know, sorry.' I pat her arm. âI am so, so out of practice at this.'
A pause, with sympathetic smiles from Mindy and Caroline.
âI'll hook you up with some hotness, when you're ready.' Mindy pats my arm.
âWoah,' Ivor says.
âWhat?'
âJudging from the men you
do
date, I'm trying to imagine the ones you pass over. I'm getting a message from my brain:
the server understood your request but is refusing to fulfil it.
'
âOh, considering your rancid trollops, this is
rich
.'
âNo, it was that thundering helmet Bruno who was rich, remember?'
âAherm, he also had a nice bum.'
âSo there you go,' Caroline interrupts. âHave we cheered you up? Feeling brighter?'
âYes. A sort of nuclear glow,' I say.
âMore serious Slush Puppy?' Caroline asks.
I hold my glass up.
âShitloads, please.'
I met Ben at the end of our first week at Manchester University. I initially thought he was a second or third year, because he was with the older team who'd set up trestle tables in my halls of residence bar to issue our accommodation ID cards. In fact, he'd started off as a customer, same as me. In what I'd later discover was a typically garrulous, generous Ben thing to do, he'd offered to help and hopped over the tables when they'd complained they were short-handed.
I wouldn't have been upright myself, but my hangover had woken me and told me it desperately needed Ribena. The grounds of my halls were as deserted at nine a.m. as if it was dawn. Draining the bottle as I walked back from the shops in the autumn sunshine, I saw a small queue snaking out of the bar's double doors. Being British, and a nervous fresher, I thought I'd better join it.
When I got to the front and a space appeared in front of Ben, I stepped forward.
His mildly startled but not at all displeased expression seemed to read, quite clearly: âOoh, and you are?'
This startled me back, not least because it somehow wasn't leery. On a good day (which this wasn't) I thought I scrubbed up reasonably well but I hadn't had many looks like this before. It was as if someone had cued music, fluffed my hair, lit me from above and shouted âaction'.
Ben wasn't at all my type. Bit skinny, bit obvious, with those brown doe-eyes and that squared-off jaw, bit
white bread
as Rhys would say. (He had recently come into my life, along with his definitive worldview that, bit by bit, was becoming mine.) And from what I could see of Ben's upper half, he was clad in sportswear in such a manner that implied he actually played sports. Attractive men, in my eighteen-year-old opinion, played lead guitar, not football. They were scruffy and saturnine, had five o'clock shadows and â recent amendment due to research in the field â chest hair you could lose a gerbil in. Still, I was open-minded enough to allow that Ben would be plenty of other people's type, and that made the attention pretty damn flattering. The low clouds of my hangover started lifting.
Ben said:
âHello.'
âHello.'
A beat while we remembered what we were here for. âName?' Ben said.
âRachel Woodford.'
âWoodford ⦠W â¦' He started riffling through boxes of cards. âGotcha.'
He produced a rectangle of cardboard with the name of our halls and a passport photo affixed to it. I'd forgotten I'd sent a handful from a not very flattering session in a shopping centre photo booth.
Really
bad day, Meadowhall, pre-menstrual. Face like I'd woken up at my own autopsy. Might've known they'd come back to haunt me.
âDon't laugh at the picture,' I said, hastily, and potentially counter-productively.
Ben peered at it. âI've seen worse today.'
He clamped my card in the machine, took the plasticated version out and inspected it again.
âI know it's grim,' I said, holding out my hand. âI look like I'm trying to pass a dragon fruit.'
âI don't know what a dragon fruit is. I mean, other than a fruit, I'm guessing.'
âIt's spiky.'
âAh OK. Yeah. I 'spose that'd sting a bit.'
Well. That had gone beautifully. Seduction 101:
make the attractive boy imagine you straining on the toilet.
This was straight from my greatest hits back catalogue, by the way. Quintessential Rachel, The Cream of Rachel,
Simply Rachel
. When put on the spot, the linguistic function of my brain offers the same potluck as a one-armed bandit. Crank the handle and ratchet the tension, it rings up any old combination of words.
Ben gave me a smile that turned into laughter. I grinned back.
He kept the card out of my reach.
âYou're on English?'
âYes.'
âMe too. I haven't got a clue where I'm meant to be for registration tomorrow. Have you?'
We made an arrangement for him to stop by my room the next morning so we could navigate the arts block together. He found a pen. I scribbled my room number down for him on the nearest thing to hand, a spongy beer mat. I wished I hadn't spent last night painting every one of my fingernails a different colour, which looked pretty silly in the light of day. I printed âRachel' in un-joined up letters neatly below, as if I was writing out a label for my coat peg at primary school.